Fish Lake Wildlife Area
DNR staff have developed an Annual Property Implementation Plan (APIP) for the Glacial Lake Grantsburg (GLG) Work Unit (Crex Meadows, Fish Lake and Amsterdam Sloughs Wildlife Areas). The public is encouraged to review the APIP during an open comment period from March 24-30 and provide comments to DNR staff. This is the core public input process on the management of GLG properties year.
APIPs contain the major management and infrastructure projects planned for the property for the upcoming year, such as forest/habitat management treatments and recreation development projects. The GLG APIP also contains the 2024 GLG Water Management Plan and results from the 2023 Water Management Plan.
The GLG APIP can be found on the DNR’s APIP website. Please review the plan and submit any comments to dnrglg@wisconsin.gov or use the contact directory link available on the APIP webpage.
Fish Lake Wildlife Area is a 14,000-acre property of wetlands, pine/oak barrens and forests scattered across a gently rolling landscape. It is located in western Burnett County. Fish Lake Wildlife Area is located approximately 3 miles south of Grantsburg and can be accessed from Highway 87 on the east, Fish Lake Road on the north, Shogren Road on the west and County Road O on the south.
Fish Lake is open year-round, with something to do and see during every season. Most visitors come to view wildlife. The popularity of Fish Lake is attributed to its large size, spectacular vistas and great diversity of plants and wildlife. A system of well-maintained roads and observation areas provide excellent access and wildlife viewing opportunities.
Some visitors come to hunt or trap. The 1,200-acre wildlife refuge is closed to hunting and trapping from September 1-November 30 except for being open to hunting deer during the nine-day firearm and muzzleloader season. The remainder of the property is open to hunting and trapping. Fish Lake provides abundant hunting opportunities for deer, bears, turkeys, waterfowl and a variety of small game. Trappers have opportunities for nearly every furbearer found in Wisconsin.
The Department has received complaints regarding unauthorized manipulation or interference with water control structures. This impedes the Department’s ability to manage and protect natural resources. Furthermore, alteration to these structures, their components, or embankment soils has the potential to damage or undermine these structures or associated public roads and therefore poses a risk to public health and safety.
Therefore, the Department hereby closes the identified water control structures and their immediate vicinity pursuant to s. NR 45.04 (1)(b). Signage notifying the public of this closure (and identifying the closed area) shall be installed as soon as possible. The closure of these water control structures will not impact nor impede public conveyance over adjacent public roads or public access to the flowages.
View the affected portions of this property.
History
Fish Lake is part of the Northwest Sands Ecological Landscape. This landscape extends from northern Polk County to southern Bayfield County and covers nearly 2000 square miles. This large sand plain is a result of a large glacial lake (Glacial Lake Grantsburg) that covered the area after the retreat of the last glacier approximately 12,000 years ago. The southern portion of the landscape, where Fish Lake is located, contains huge sedge marshes. These vast marshes are remnants of the glacial lake.
The sandy uplands of the wildlife area were historically covered by a jack pine savannah or brush prairie. The vegetation consisted of large jack and red pine widely scattered throughout an open expense of prairie grasses and wildflowers and a variety of woody vegetation including sweet fern, hazel, willow, blueberry and oak brush. The plant community was maintained by naturally occurring wildfires that frequently swept through the area.
European settlement, beginning in the mid-1800s, caused many changes to the area. Settlers began farming the sandy uplands, which were easy to clear but produced poor crops. In the late 1800s, they began draining the sedge marshes for framing and commercial cranberry production. These efforts were commercially unsuccessful but upset the ecological balance of the area.
Fire control efforts began in the early 1900s and the number and extent of wildfires gradually declined. In the absence of fire, most of the once common brush prairie grew into the oak-jack pine forest. Many of the native wildlife populations declined or completely disappeared as their habitat was lost. In 1912, several thousand acres of sedge marsh were purchased by the Crex Carpet Co. For the next 20 years, this company harvested "wiregrass" (actually a sedge) from the marshes. The sedges were shipped by rail to the factory in St. Paul, where they were used to manufacture "grass rugs" and furniture. The company went bankrupt in 1933, and all its land holdings went to the ownership of Burnett County. The foundations of a large camp (Camp 5) are still evident in the center of the property.
During the depression and drought years of the 1930s, further wetland drainage and agricultural attempts failed. By 1940, two-thirds of the land in this area was tax delinquent. The Fish Lake Wildlife Area began in 1946 when the Wisconsin Conservation Department (now the Department of Natural Resources) began buying these tax-delinquent lands for a public hunting ground.
Management objective
Management focuses on restoring the native wetland and brush prairie habitats that existed here before settlement. Management began in the early 1950s when the first dikes were constructed to re-flood the drained marshes. Timber sales and prescribed burning are used to restore the brush prairie habitat.
The wildlife area currently contains 10 flowages that flood 2,322 acres. Numerous potholes, several small runoff ponds and a water transfer ditch have also been constructed. Wetland management includes periodic drawdowns of the flowages. More than 3,000 acres of brush prairie have been restored and are maintained with prescribed burning.
Management plans include additional brush prairie and wetland restoration and acquiring the remaining private lands within the boundaries. About 1,500 acres of forest will be retained and managed for forest wildlife habitat and timber production. There is one natural lake (Fish Lake) located in the northwest corner of the property.
For more information on master planning for this and other wildlife areas around the state, visit the property planning page. The Fish Lake Wildlife Area is included in the Glacial Lake Grantsburg Master Plan.
Friends Group
The Friends of Crex was established in 1984. It is a support group for Crex Meadows, Fish Lake and the other properties that comprise the Glacial Lake Grantsburg Wildlife Management Complex. For more information, visit Friends of Crex Inc. [exit DNR].
Recreation
The Fish Lake Wildlife Area offers many recreational opportunities:
- Auto travel
- Biking
- Birding
- Canoeing
- Cross-country skiing (no designated trail)
- Fishing
- Hiking (no designated trail)
- Hunting (noted for deer, bears, turkey, waterfowl, and a variety of small game)
- Snowmobiling trail
- Trapping
- Wild edibles/gathering
- Wildlife viewing
Note: The wildlife refuge is closed to hunting and trapping from September 1-November 30 except for being open to hunting deer during the nine-day firearm and muzzleloader season.
Amenities
- Bathroom - none.
- Parking lot - numerous parking lots throughout the property.
- Campground and size - none.
- Trails, Types and Lengths - Several hunter walking trails and a snowmobile trail.
- Other amenities - two overlooks (Grettum on Hwy 87 and Deuholm on Stolte Road), boat launches on Deuholm and Fish Lake, and two handicap-accessible deer hunting blinds.
Maps
Download [PDF] a map of this property.
If you want to explore this property further, you can access an interactive map.